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Re: None

Thursday, 10/03/2024 11:42:03 AM

Thursday, October 03, 2024 11:42:03 AM

Post# of 70726
It also might be that some private investor group wants to step in and be a part of a future behemoth brewery if that group contributed enough funds to buy them out.

I've mentioned before that the promissory note lenders could be a part of that group, creating a closely knit group of friends and associates who would own the company without the hassles of running a public company.

But first, remember this is pure speculation and not investment advice. I am not a financial advisor so it's essential that you do your own due diligence.

Anyway, if I was one of those promissory note lenders who saw the success of the taproom after such a short period of time after opening, along with seeing the growth in beer sales via the new distributor, it certainly would make me believe that the company has the skill set to grow the company into a behemoth regional and nationwide brewery, if they had the proper funding.

So since BRBL is proving their success, those investors might be dreaming big about becoming early owners of a very large brewery someday.

Who knows how it's all going to play out, but from my perspective I might only have less than 2 weeks now to buy more shares in the event the company gets bought out, in case they end up up on the Expert Market in advance .

If the company wasn't firing on all cylinders, these thoughts wouldn't even come to mind.

Let's step back a second and think about the large hospitality franchise company again. If they do even exist, they too would have seen the stellar success of the first BrewBilt brewery, which should give them confidence that a microbrewery franchise might indeed be a very good business investment, especially since microbreweries in general have proven to have better profit margins than franchise based restaurants, and there are many deep-pocketed investors always looking to buy into a new franchise operation.

Plus, business loan rates have now started to fall so if they spent the next 1-2 years building franchises, then this pending recession could be over about the same time that the microbreweries started opening up.

Just food for thought.